Calabash (percussion)
| Percussionist (Mamadou Sarr) playing the Calabash with the bare hand technique | |
| Percussion instrument | |
|---|---|
| Classification | percussion | 
| Hornbostel–Sachs classification | 111.3 | 
In African music, the calabash is a percussion instrument of the family of idiophones consisting of a half of a large calabash gourd, which is struck with the palms, fingers, wrist or objects to produce a variety of percussive sounds.
In Tuareg music, the askalabo is a calabash "partly submerged in water, drummed to mimic camels' hooves".
The calabash can also be used as a sound board: a finger piano (a flat board with a bridge on which prongs are fastened, that are then played with the fingers) can use a calabash for that purpose, and the gongoma is a similar instrument, using saw blades on a bridge affixed over the calabash—the blades are plucked with the fingers, while the player taps the calabash with their other hand.
A calabash can also be used as a resonator, in the case of the umakhweyane, a middle-braced calabash bow.